The Contract Marsh, Nicola (sad books to read txt) š
Book online Ā«The Contract Marsh, Nicola (sad books to read txt) šĀ». Author Marsh, Nicola
He called back and she answered on the first ring. āSteven, where have you been? Iāve been trying to get hold of you all evening.ā
āBusiness. You know, that thing I do for a living.ā
He heard a sniff and imagined the disdainful expression on his motherās well-preserved face. āDonāt bait me. You know you donāt have to work. Itās some perverse streak that pushes you to earn a living when youāre more than comfortable.ā
Georgia Rockwell, queen of the understatement. His motherās version of comfortable meant filthy, stinking rich, a fact heād been only too aware of his entire life. Sheād never understood his ambition to be self-made, to spend his hours grappling with complex problems in order to feel some degree of achievement.
No use trying to convince her now, heād wasted enough breath in the past. āWhat did you want?ā
She sighed, a superficial sound sheād used many times in the past to coerce him into doing something he didnāt want to do. āYour grandmotherās condition is progressively worsening. I thought you should know.ā
A strange hollowness filled his heart at the thought of the delicate old woman who had been the only person to show him any real love growing up lying helpless in a bed, ravaged by cancer.
āHow bad is she?ā
āThe doctors only give her another few months at the most.ā
Panic gripped him. Heād made a promise to Ethel St. John when sheād first been diagnosed and unfortunately, hadnāt followed through. Sheād said the one thing sustaining her was the thought of him marrying and producing an heir for her fortune. They had that in common, a lack of confidence in his society mother who would squander the money rather than fulfil a dying ladyās wishes.
His motherās next words made him sit down. āShe told me, Steven.ā
āTold you what?ā
Surely his grandmother hadnāt confided in the daughter she despised?
āAbout your promise. So what are you doing about it?ā
His mother hadnāt mentioned the money and he found that unusual. If she knew about the stipulation in Ethelās will sheād be screaming into the receiver rather than speaking in the cultivated voice heād grown to hate. āWhat do you mean?ā
āStop answering my questions with questions. You know perfectly well what Iām talking about. Mother informed me the only reason sheās fighting this nasty disease is to see you married. Well? What are you doing about it?ā
Her short, clipped tones reminded him of endless criticisms of days gone by. āSteven, donāt talk with your mouth full, donāt run inside, donāt speak like the ruffians in the local public school, donāt let me catch you playing with that little tramp from next door...ā It had continued throughout his childhood, a never-ending nightmare.
Thankfully, his grandmother hadnāt divulged her whole secret. Otherwise, his mother would be even more insufferable, if that were possible. āI have everything under control, Mum. Nothing for you to worry about.ā
āBut I do worry, Steven.ā
Yeah, over who has the bigger sportscar, the newest designer handbag or the largest portfolio. His mother hadnāt worried about her son, ever.
āLeave it alone.ā He unfurled his fingers, not realising heād clenched his fists. āSend my love to Gran and tell her Iāll see her soon.ā
āOh, Steven.ā How she managed to install so much disapproval into those two words, heād never know.
āBye, Mum.ā He hung up without waiting for a reply, annoyed she pushed his buttons every time.
As he undressed, he recalled the last few months where heād dated what he termed āsuitable womenā for his venture. For thatās what marriage would be to him, a joint merging of two people, profitable to them both. However, he had standards and heād found most of the women lacking. Besides, bearing a child would be part of the deal, a fact most of the women in his world would go to any lengths to avoid.
In the meanwhile, his Gran was dying and he couldnāt let her down. He wouldnāt.
A glimmer of an idea insinuated its way into his tired brain. This marriage needed to happen quickly and it had to be a win-win situation for both parties. He needed a woman who would understand the terms of their agreement, a logical business deal profitable to them both.
Luckily, heād just met the perfect candidate.
* * *
Short of listening in at the keyhole, Amber had no other option but to wait until her fatherās meeting with Steve concluded to hear the outcome. She paced the grounds, supervising the new pirate ride and exchanging banter with some of the operators. Most of the carnival workers had been here for years and she marvelled at their loyalty in the face of lucrative offers from the ābig boysā down the road.
She owed them a lot. If only there was something she could do to stave off the inevitable.
āWhat happened to the fortune teller outfit?ā
She jumped, unaware the man whose image had kept her up all night had snuck up behind her.
āI was filling in yesterday. How did the meeting go?ā
She didnāt have time for small talk. Her feet itched to run straight to her father and hear the news from a loved one rather than the smooth lawyer whose kisses had ensured she tossed and turned all night.
He grinned, his cocky smile making her treacherous heart lurch. āSo all that fortune stuff you told me yesterday was guess-work? Nice going. And here
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